If Europeans are to
retain their racial identity (not pure, but such as it is)
as ethnic Europeans and Europe's (indeed, the world's)
cultural and ethnic diversity is not to disappear in a
giant "melting pot" in the decades and centuries
ahead, we need to develop civilized ways
(which do not include South-African-type
apartheid or southern-states-of-America-type segregation)
of cultivating and maintaining them.

At the moment,
particularly in Britain, the very opposite is happening:
integration and assimilation, via the intermediate stage of
multi-culturalism, are being energetically encouraged by the
economy (which wants cheap labour), government (which wants
ONE national identity), local authorities and the media,
together with the self-interests and ideology of certain
minority groups, and anyone who raises any objections
(certainly if they are a member of the indigenous, native
European population) is dismissed and condemned as a
"racist".

Even writing as I
am here will be condemned by some as "racist",
understandably, perhaps, by people of mixed race, who have
an obvious interest in the expansion of their own ethnic
group and in a reduction of the dominant white majority,but also by an elite group of
"white" ideologists (not just, but particularly strong amongst the
political left and left-leaning media),
whose motivations I'm still trying to understand,but who have succeeded
(with the best of misguided intentions, I'm
sure) in
imposing their "melting pot",
race-doesn't-matter ideology on the whole of
society, not through open discussionand argument, but
by intimidation : one word against immigration,
multiracial/multicultural society or the "melting pot" and
you're a "racist"!

What is wrong with
people of mixed-race? Nothing whatsoever! Far from it (they
contribute richly to man's ethnic diversity). But I don't
want them to absorb all, or even any, indigenous races into
themselves completely, thus diminishing rather than
increasing ethnic diversity; besides which, they are not the
ethnic group I happen to belong to
and identify with
myself (not withstanding
some very nice and respected individuals
among them whom I know
personally); nor do I wish them to replace my own ethnic
group of native Europeans as the numerically dominant ethnic
group on these islands and this continent
(being the original human inhabitants), which is what
will happen eventually - within a few generations, the way
things are going at the moment (optimistically assuming that
we solve the "Sustainability
Problem"), unless we stop
allowing ourselves to be intimidated and start discussing
the matter honestly and openly, in a humane and civilized
(strictly non-derogatory, non-racist) fashion.
What has been preventing this from happening up until now is
that any discussion has been intruded upon and thus brought
to an end, either by actual racists (who despise and are
insulting towards other races and with whom no civilized
person wants to be associated) or so-called "anti-racists"
who define as "racist" anyone (i.e, any white person) with
any sense of racial identity, which they wish to maintain
and cultivate.

Perhaps ever-increasing
racial homogenization is what most people want and is the way
things will go. I'm not saying that it must not happen (that
should be for individuals to freely decide for themselves), but
that it should NOT be facilitated through intimidation, which is what is
happening at the moment, and in its way
is just as pernicious as apartheid and segregation laws once were.
I suggest that this "melting pot" ideology is an extreme
overreaction to such genuine expressions of racism,
particularly to the insane racial ideology of the Nazis and
its consequences, the shock of which, in our collective
subconscious, we are still under. Instead of facing up to
the implications openly and honesty, there has been a
panic-stricken overreaction of "anti-racism", which condemns
any acknowledgement of racial difference or identity as
racist (at least by white people, which is what the Nazis
were) .

My arguments
against the "melting pot" are not racist (not
withstanding its exceptional cultural achievements, I don't
think my own race superiour to any other, nor do I feel any
hate towards other races), but born of a particular love and
attachment to, and identification with, my own European
race, and a strong desire for racial and cultural diversity,
which globalisation, mass migrations and the ideology of the
"melting pot" are destroying.